
1) What a potato battery is (quick)
A potato cell uses two different metal electrodes (typically zinc and copper) inserted into the potato. A chemical reaction between the metals and the potatoโs electrolytes creates a small voltage and a very small current. Good for lights, LEDs, or science demos โ not for real charging of modern phones.
2) Materials
- Potatoes (any)
- Copper strips or thick copper wire (clean) โ copper electrode
- Zinc nails/screws/plate (galvanized nails are common) โ zinc electrode
- Alligator clip leads or insulated wire
- Multimeter (to measure V and mA)
- Small load for testing (LED + resistor)
- Optional: DCโDC boost converter module (step-up to 5V USB output), and a USB charging module (only for experiments, not recommended for charging a phone directly)
3) Make one potato cell (step-by-step)
- Insert a copper electrode into one side of the potato.
- Insert a zinc electrode 3โ5 cm away (donโt let them touch).
- Connect copper to the multimeter positive lead, zinc to the negative.
- Measure open-circuit voltage (V): typically ~0.5โ1.0 V per potato cell. Measure short-circuit or loaded current โ usually microamps to a few milliamps, depending on electrode size and potato freshness.
4) Combine cells to get higher voltage/current
- Voltage in series: voltages add. Example: 5 cells ร 0.8 V โ 4.0 V.
- Current in parallel: currents add. If one cell can supply โ1 mA under load, two parallel strings give โ2 mA.
Realistic math example (step-by-step):
โข Assume each potato cell = 0.8 V and can provide ~1 mA under load.
โข To reach 5 V you need cells in series: 5 V รท 0.8 V โ 6.25 โ round up โ 7 cells in series gives ~5.6 V.
โข A smartphone typically wants ~500 mA (safe slow current) at 5 V. If each series string provides ~1 mA, you need 500 parallel strings to reach โ500 mA.
โข Total potatoes = 7 cells/series ร 500 parallel strings = 3,500 potatoes.
So: ~3,500 potatoes to supply a single 500 mA USB charge โ totally impractical.
Even for a tiny trickle (say 50 mA):
- 50 mA รท 1 mA = 50 parallel strings ร 7 = 350 potatoes.
5) If you still want to experiment safely
- Build one potato cell, measure voltage/current, light an LED. Learn series/parallel wiring.
- If you try to boost voltage to 5V with a DCโDC module, do not connect that directly to a phone battery pack โ phone batteries (Li-ion) require precise charging circuits and protections. Using a potato array + boost converter risks damaging the phone or battery.
6) Practical alternatives to actually charge a phone
- A small USB solar panel (5โ10 W) โ inexpensive and reliable.
- A small USB power bank (portable battery) โ safe and convenient.
- Hand-crank USB generators for emergency charging.
These are affordable and safe compared to trying to scale potato cells.
7) Safety & final notes
Never attempt to charge lithium batteries without proper charging circuitry and protections.
Potato batteries are fun educational projects.
They are not a feasible practical power source for modern electronics.




